Enlightenment Reformation

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A01=Derya Gurses Tarbuck
anti-Newtonian thought
Author_Derya Gurses Tarbuck
Benjamin Kennicott
Bristol Reference Library
Category=NHTB
Divine Analogy
duncan
early modern church-state relations
eighteenth-century theology
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Flood Account
forbes
george
George III
hebraic
Hebraic Studies
Hebrew biblical interpretation
Hebrew Language
horne
hutchinson
Hutchinson's Ideas
Hutchinson's Works
hutchinsonian
Hutchinsonian Argument
Hutchinsonian Claim
Hutchinson’s Ideas
Hutchinson’s Works
ideas
intellectual history
john
Kabbala Denudata
Knorr Von Rosenroth
Material Cosmos
National Biography
opposition to Enlightenment science
Oxford Circle
Oxford Group
Reliquiae Diluvianae
Scriptural Geologists
studies
Thomas Sharp
Trinitarian Christianity
Trinitarian doctrine
Unpointed Hebrew
Van Mildert
William Van Mildert
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032402307
  • Weight: 258g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 29 Aug 2022
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Taking a fresh and imaginative approach to the topic, Enlightenment Reformation investigates how and why Hutchinsonianism came into being, evolved and eventually ended. In surveying the history of this intellectual movement, it explores the controversies in and around religion that sat at the very centre of the Enlightenment period in Britain.

During the eighteenth century, many opponents of Isaac Newton's cosmology and natural religion gravitated to the writings of John Hutchinson (1674–1737). United by a strong belief in the Christian Trinity and a particular approach to the reading of Hebrew Biblical texts, the essential tenets of Hutchinsonianism remained for over a century the main source of opposition to Enlightenment scientific theories. Integrating the various aspects of Hutchinsonianism that together help to define the movement, this book first critiques the existing historiography on the subject and second provides an overview of the movement’s thought, growth and downfall.

This volume offers a fascinating perspective on the role of religion, science and ecclesiastical history in eighteenth-century thought and will be valuable reading for scholars working in intellectual and cultural history, in particular the history of philosophy, legal history, education and the relationship between church and state in the early modern period.

Derya Gurses Tarbuck is Assistant Professor in History at Bahcesehir University, Turkey. She obtained her PhD in intellectual history at Bilkent University in Turkey and has since held fellowship positions at UCLA, Cambridge and the University of Edinburgh. She has published extensively on eighteenth-century intellectual history.

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